The most widely used list of hieroglyphs is Gardiner's sign list (1928/9), which includes 763 signs in 26 categories.
Georg Möller compiled more extensive lists, organised by historical epoch (published posthumously in 1927 and 1936).
The UnicodeEgyptian Hieroglyphs block (Unicode version 5.2, 2009) includes 1071 signs, with organisation based on Gardiner's list. As of 2016, there is a proposal by Michael Everson to extend the Unicode standard to comprise Möller's list.[1]

1. Ideogram for tp, "head"; other uses related to actions of the head; (example "the tp of the rebels", 'the "chief" of the rebels');2. also for tp, see archaic dagger;3. (Narmer Palette shows 10 enemy heads-(decapitated))

1. the heron-like Bennu;2. Determinative for bnw, the "Phoenix-bird";3. For 'Phoenix' & Harp, in both cultures-(Egypt & Mesopotamia), one of few Akkadian, Semitic word similarities: Akkadian: banuA, to create, build, generate; and banuB, to be good, beautiful.[2]

1. Determinative for various plants or flowers;2. Two phonemes for "cane", and "canes", ḥn-(from ḥni), is-(from isw). 3. flower (garland), plant, branch, seed 4. Rosetta Stone, line R12, The people shall wear garlands on their heads, shall be made festal...

as a replacement for the "Garland"-(3-Plants-Bundle), "...., and the great processional festival of the Goddess Bast, because the time for the in-gathering of all the crops, and the inundation of theNile (River) taketh place therein. ...."[3]

1. Ideogram or det. for ‘’wḏ, a stele; det. for 'ḥ'w, station (of a procession), "stele"; used also for 'memorial slab', boundary stone, landmark. 2. NOTE: there are other listed, (or Non-listed) hieroglyphs for boundary steles:

four props, the Four Pillars of Heaven; also as, s(kh)nut, four pillars of the sky; (sa)(kh)niu, additionally, 4 legs of a chair; s(kh)nut, 4 legs of a vessel & s(kh)nut IV, the 4 Pillars that Support the Sky

S16

U+132E4

𓋤

S17

U+132E5

𓋥

S17A

U+132E6

𓋦

S18

U+132E7

𓋧

(mnit)

"menatnecklaceandcounterpoise"

1. "Menat and counterpoise"; 2. Ideogram or det. in mnit, the necklace of Menat pearls

as det. for "to comb"; the other use of 'to comb', is for 'to card wool' and also uses the Horn hieroglyph, but is the equivalent word: b’-(no. 2, of 3); (no. 1 is a vessel, bowl, but made of "copper", etc.)

1. like, as, according to, inasmuch as, since, as well as, together with; all adverbial forms, some as a segue; 2. early forms use other hieroglyphs; 3. Egyptian: mity and mitt relate to "image" or "likeness": likeness, copy, resemblance, statue, image, similitude, the like etc.